(2) J Michael Cole 寇 謐將, Taiwan's Master Plan to Defeat China in a War. The National Interest, Mar 31, 2015.
nationalinterest.org/feature/taiwans-master-plan-defeat-china-war-12510
(Taiwan "must explore more offensive options. It has already begun doing so, with the production and deployment of Land Attack Cruise Missiles (LACM), naval suppression kits, and standoff air-to-ground missiles (cluster bombs, anti-radiation) capable of disabling airfields as well as missile and radar sites in China. The deployment and dispersal of larger quantities of road-mobile or naval LACM launchers would also make it more difficult for the PLA to locate and destroy all of them and thus increase the potency of Taiwan’s counterstrike capabilities, especially if their range were increased * * * To maximize the impact of its counterforce capabilities, Taiwan would also have to improve its ability to pinpoint targets through greater investment in radar and satellite technology—and ensure redundancy, as those would also likely be targeted by the PLA in the initial phase of a conflict")
My comment:
(a) The National Interest
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_National_Interest
(1985- ; an American bi-monthly international affairs magazine published by the Center for the National Interest [based in Washington DC])
(b) I read this essay at the time, did not think it as novel, and did not introduce it to you.
(c) The 王洪光 essay is even worse: it does not talk about military aspects of an invasion. Only boasts, about other aspects (such as psychology and pains accompanies by a war).